Updated: Published
Hi, I was interested in becoming a school nurse but I was wondering if you had to be an RN to apply for the job. If you can be an LPN what is the process for applying?
It just goes to show the difference of State requirements. I live in Georgia and LPNs do the same as two and four year RNs. The RNs were designed to be Lead Nurses, however that fell by the wayside. RNs can take the state certification after three years experence as a school nurse. I have a BS in another field and cannot sit for the state certification. I will be able to soon.
In Arkansas they have RNs, LPNs, and Health Aides.
But in my school district which has 5 schools, and it is just one RN and I think a health aid in each school.
Well one day my son fell off a (I'd say at least 8 ft slide, which was there when I was in 3rd grade)from the very top and landed on his stomach. He went to the nurses office, was seen by neither a health aide or a nurse, told them what happened and that his stomach hurt. Told him it would be ok (didn't check it because it was underneath his pants area) and sent him back to class. NOONE called me. This happened at lunch recess. I picked him up from daycare and on the way home he tells me he has a bruise on his stomach. I told him I'd look at it once we got home. When we got home he had a softball size bruise on his stomach which was also swollen and hard as a rock. It was 4:30 his lunch was at 11:00. I called his doctor and was told to take him to the ER because they were closing and he figured he might need x-rays if not a CT. Luckly everything was ok and they gave him an ice pack and sent him home. But what if something had ruptured or worse? I took him to the school the next day and showed the bruise to the principle, all he did was say he was sorry and that he would have the nurse notify all parents of any injuries (before that I was getting calls about splints in fingers). But I got stuck paying the $800 hospital bill because when I sent in for the $20 school insurance they have us fill out at the beginning of the year, somehow my paper work didn't get processed and he wasn't covered. They said that the school district wasn't responsible for injuries on the playground or anywhere else on school property.
I'm not sure where the original poster is from, but in North Texas also, you have to be BSN. I've never understood why.
I know this is kind of an old thread, but in case anyone from north TX reads this, it depends on the district. I have worked in 3 different districts over the years. Some districts will only hire nurses with a BSN. Some districts employ nurses with associates degrees. Some districts have LVN's. Some have health aides. I know of one district that has all of the above.
A lot of districts, though, seem to be moving to only hiring BSN nurses to fill empty positions. The reason for BSN over ADN is probably that all other school district professionals (e.g. teachers, librarians, counselors) must have bachelor's degrees at the bare minimum, and school nurses here are almost always on the same level/pay-scale as other district professionals.
Jolie, BSN
6,375 Posts
Thanks for the clarification. So, in IL, "school nurse" is a protected title, reserved for those with certification. It will be interesting to see how this all plays out, as I'm quite certain there aren't enough certified school nurses to go around, nor districts willing to pay their nurses on the same scale as certified teachers.